Household appliances such as stand mixers generally include control panels located upon the side of the mixer. These control panels typically are not illuminated. With these stand mixers, there is the inconvenience of accessing the control panel from the side, and a lack of a quickly recognizable indication of the speed of the mixer.
Therefore, a primary objective of the present invention is the provision of a stand mixer having an improved speed selection mechanism.
Another objective of the present invention is a stand mixer having a control panel with an illuminated speed indicator.
In addition, the stand mixers of the prior art have not utilized the top portion of the upper surface of the mixer house. This location provides the advantages of being readily accessible by either hand of the user and good visibility. Accordingly, another objective of the present invention is a stand mixer having a control panel on the top of the stand mixer.
Still another objective of the present invention is a stand mixer having an improved speed indicator.
A further objective of the present invention is a provision of an improved power switch which allows for a stand mixer being moved from a standby mode or sleep mode, on, and off.
A still further objective of the invention is the provision of an improved stand mixer having a rotatable dial which is easy to adjust for a plurality of mixer speeds.
A still further objective of the present invention is the provision of an improved stand mixer design which is economically manufactured and durable in use.
These and other objectives will become apparent from the following description of the invention.
The foregoing objectives may be achieved by the stand mixer of the present invention which has a mixer housing with an upper surface and a lower surface. The stand mixer also has a motor within the mixer housing with a downwardly extending drive shaft. The stand mixer also has a speed selection dial and a speed indicator located on the upper surface of the mixer housing. The motor is started by the user actuating the power switch and the speed of the motor is adjustable by the user rotating the speed dial. An LED is automatically illuminated corresponding to the selected motor speed.
The stand mixer of the present invention is generally designated in the drawings by the reference numeral 10. As seen in
The upper housing 16 has a top portion 32 and the bottom portion 34. A control panel 40 includes speed indicator lenses 42, a power button 44, and a radial dial 46 on the top portion 32 of the housing 16. The speed lenses 42 are oval and circle shaped and are labeled on/off and 1-10. The speed lenses 42 are positioned adjacent the radial dial 46 along a radius from its axis of rotation. The oval lens 42 is labeled on/off and circle lenses are labeled 1-10 with 1 being the slowest speed and 10 being the highest speed. Also upon the control panel 40 is a power light or readiness indicator 48. The readiness indicator 48 is off when the mixer 10 is completely off, is blinking when the stand mixer 10 is in a standby mode, and is illuminated when the mixer 10 is on.
As seen in
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As further illustrated by
The on/off or power button 44 is a non-latching voluntary tactile switch. The power button 44 controls the power state of the mixer motor 52. In the preferred embodiment, the power button 44 is located in the center of the rotary or radial dial 46. The power button 44 is used to alternatively start and stop the motor 52. To start the motor 52, the user momentarily pushes the power button 44. The motor will start with the depression of the power button 44. Releasing the power button 44 has no effect. To stop the mixer motor, the user momentarily pushes the power button 44, thereby placing the stand mixer 10 in the standby mode. The motor 52 will stop with the depression of the power button 44. Releasing the power button has no effect. Repeatedly pushing the power button 44 alternates the stand mixer 10 between the standby mode and the on mode.
The radial dial 46 is used to adjust the speed of the motor 52. The rotary dial 46 when rotated counter-clockwise increases the speed and when moved in a clockwise direction decreases the speed.
An exploded view of the control panel 40 in alignment with the control device 58 is seen in
The control device 58 has a base 60, a casing 86 attached to the base 60, and a moveable cover 84 moving with an opening defined by the base 60 and the casing 86. The control device 58 also has an arm 78 extending from an opening in the cover 84. An illuminator casing 80 is attached to the arm 78, and within the illuminator casing 80 is an illuminator 82. The illuminator 82 is preferably a light emitting diode or LED. A grommet 88 is placed upon the casing 86 for sealing the inner workings of the control device 58. The control device 58 is connected to the upper housing 16 by a nut 100 which is separated from other components by spacers 104.
A shroud 90 is used to guide light from the illuminator 82 through the lens 42. The lenses are joined together by a web 92. The web 92 is sufficiently thin to prevent bleed over from one light lens 42 to the next light lens 42 while the illuminator 82 is in axial alignment with a lens 42. The shroud 90 is also designed to minimize bleed over from one lens to the next. The shroud 90 separates the illuminator 82 from the lens by a distance. The shroud 90 is formed from an opaque plastic material with through-holes 91 to accept the lenses 42. When the illuminator 82 is aligned with a through-hole 91, the light from the illuminator 82 is channeled to the lens 42. The lens 42 is fit into the lens opening 94 in the housing 16 after being placed within the shroud 90. The shroud and lens assembly is attached to the upper housing 16 by screws (not shown) placed through shroud connector assembly 95 and into the upper housing 16.
As further seen in
The radial dial 46 has a soft touch insert 106 that allows for slight compression of the radial dial 46 by user and for comfortable movement of the dial 46 by the user. The rotary dial 46 attaches to the control device 58 by having a female structure 108 that engages the control device 58. A spring 110 is placed within the rotary dial 46 and held in place by a cap 112 that attaches to the rotary dial 46. The power button 44 is attached to the top of the cap 112. The spring 110 biases the power button 44 to a raised position.
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As seen in
A simple block diagram is provided in
In use, rotation of the rotary dial 46 from the off position to any one of the available motor speeds causes contact 64 to move from an open to a closed state. This action places the stand mixer 10 in the standby mode. The user then evaluates the motor speed by a observing the speed indicator lenses 42 located on the top portion 32 of upper housing 16. The user may adjust the speed control unit by use of the rotary dial 46 to select any one of a plurality of speeds. The user may also evaluate the readiness of the stand mixer using the readiness indicator 48. The readiness indicator 48 indicates whether the stand mixer is in an off mode, a standby mode, or an on mode. The user changes the mode of the stand mixer by repeatedly pushing the power button 44 to move the stand mixer from on mode to a standby mode, and back to an on mode.
The invention has been shown and described above with the preferred embodiments, and it is understood that many modifications, substitutions, and additions may be made which are within the intended spirit and scope of the invention. From the foregoing, it can be seen that the present invention accomplishes at least all of its stated objectives.